The sale of illegal or contraband tobacco is a crime. You can face serious penalties for buying, selling or possessing contraband tobacco.
Contraband tobacco is not tolerated in B.C. The province takes enforcement action to combat the underground economy, including contraband tobacco.
Participating in activities associated with illegal or contraband tobacco:
Threatens tax revenue, reducing support for important government programs such as healthcare, infrastructure and education
Undermines government efforts to reduce smoking rates and protect minors from the dangers of smoking
Contributes to health and safety risks due to the lack of oversight of unregulated products
Compromises public safety by providing funds used to finance organized crime and other criminal activities such as drug and gun trafficking
Contraband tobacco includes:
Legitimate tobacco has specific stamps or marks:
Packages of cigarettes and fine cut tobacco intended for tax-paid sales in B.C. must have the green B.C. stamp
Packages of cigarettes and fine cut tobacco intended for tax-exempt sales to First Nations and through duty-free stores (black stock tobacco) only have the federal government’s peach stamp
Cigars, snuff, pipe, chewing and raw leaf tobacco do not require a B.C. stamp or mark but must have the appropriate federal stamp or mark where applicable.
Cigarettes and fine cut tobacco that are not stamped as described above are illegal.
Legitimate tobacco has tobacco tax included in the price. For example, the B.C. tobacco tax portion for a carton of cigarettes is $65.00. A carton sold for less than this amount is likely illegal.
Illegal activities involving legal tobacco include:
Selling tobacco to persons under the age of 19
Selling any tobacco product without an authorized permit
Reselling duty-free purchased tobacco
Selling taxable tobacco products without charging or collecting tobacco tax
Selling tax-exempt tobacco to customers who are not eligible
Refer to making tax-exempt tobacco sales or Exemptions for Members of the Diplomatic and Consular Corps (PDF) to find out who is eligible to purchase tax-exempt tobacco
Possessing more than 1,000 grams (equivalent of 5 cartons) of tobacco if you are a consumer
Importing tobacco without paying tobacco tax
Visit Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) for more information on declaring tobacco when crossing the border
Selling imported tobacco declared for personal use
Penalties for being involved in illegal tobacco activities include:
B.C. works closely with other federal and provincial jurisdictions to combat contraband tobacco and wilful tobacco tax evasion.
B.C. takes enforcement action against contraband tobacco through a dedicated Investigations Unit that:
Works closely with the RCMP, other policing agencies, Canada Revenue Agency and CBSA as well as provincial counterparts to prevent illegal activity and tax evasion
Conducts investigations into wilful non-compliance and fraud against tax revenues
Provides training and education to bylaw agencies, police units, health enforcement offices and industry stakeholders on how to prevent occurrences of contraband tobacco
B.C. also combats contraband tobacco through the following initiatives:
The B.C. and federal stamps with security features as well as specific B.C. markings, making counterfeit tobacco products more difficult to produce and easier to identify
A Retail Tobacco Inspection Program to prevent the sale of contraband products in retail outlets
A tip form and toll-free number where the public can anonymously report non-compliance with tobacco or other provincial taxes
A tip form and toll-free number with BC Crime Stoppers where the public can anonymously report the illegal sale and distribution of products and taxable services
Our hours of operation are Monday through Friday,
8:30 am - 4:30 pm.
Toll Free (within Canada and the U.S.A.):
1-877-388-4440